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Michael Dell has offered his largest endorsement of partners to date, with Dell EMC’s global channel business now topping US$35 billion.

Representing almost 50 per cent of the tech giant’s US$75 billion annual revenues, Dell reiterated the renewed importance of the partner ecosystem for the vendor, insisting that “the channel matters personally to me.”

Addressing over 4,000 partners at Dell EMC World 2017 in Las Vegas, Dell outlined key opportunities for the channel in the year ahead, based around cross-selling and providing end-to-end solutions for customers.

“We have the strongest and broadest partner community in the world,” he said. “There are enormous cross-selling opportunities across the full portfolio – those are opportunities to make meaningful impacts for our customers.”

Dell’s cameo appearance during the 2017 Dell EMC Global Partner Summit was both impactful and symbolic for the channel, with the leader emphasising the increased role of partners going forward, and perhaps crucially, Dell EMC's commitment to its expanding ecosystem.

Central to facilitating channel business growth is the Dell EMC Partner Program, launched in February following completion of the merger.

Designed to offer the “best of both programs” from Dell and EMC, the unified program overcame early teething issues to offer channel clarity around rules of engagement, simplified rebates and deal registration, alongside an incremental US$150 million investment in incentives.

“Make no mistake, we have ambitions to be number one,” Dell EMC global channels president John Byrne told partners. “We want to be the best and the biggest channel player in our industry.

"And you want to know a secret? I know we’re going to do it. We promised you simple, predictable and profitable. But talk is cheap. Let’s see how we’re doing.”

In a bid to provide greater protection to partners, Dell EMC has expanded its Incumbency Program to now cover infrastructure solutions, which now includes server and networking in addition to storage.

Effective 22 May, the initiative targets the commercial segment of the business and is based on historical look-back for revenue and deal registration for partners.

“Partners provided feedback and they wanted more predictably in how they engaged with Dell EMC,” Dell EMC senior vice president of channels Asia Pacific Tian Beng Ng told ARN.

“For the Infrastructure Incumbency, we looked at our end customers and if they had been buying predominantly from the channel for servers, storage and networking, we would protect that customer for the channel.

“We will look back historically to see the purchase pattern so if the end customer has been buying predominantly from the channel, then we declare it as a channel account and flag that in our internal system as ‘channel only’, which means the direct team is not able to sell in.”

In addition to the Infrastructure Incumbency expansion, Dell EMC also unveiled new partner initiatives around Client Incumbency, which is forward-looking on net-new business, specifically new customers or new business on inactive accounts

Michael Dell addresses channel partners at Dell EMC World 2017

Effective 22 May, Client Incumbency is also for the commercial segment of the business.

“This isn’t a look back but a look forward approach,” Tian Beng said. “If a partner brings forward a customer that has not bought Dell desktops or notebooks before, if they are a brand new customer then we will also protect the deal for the channel.

“This is about rewarding our partners for bringing new customers which again provides greater levels of predictability for the channel.”

Alongside incumbency releases, the vendor also opened up its partner program to the Virtustream channel, allowing resellers to sell Dell Technologies’ public cloud consumption with private cloud performance, availability and security.

"We’ve took the best of both programs," Tian Beng explained. "The positive part of the Dell program was that it was profitable but the EMC program wasn’t as profitable, yet more predictable.

“So we took the predictable element of EMC and the profitable element of Dell.”

Furthermore, Tian Beng told ARN that the combined program leveraged EMC's strong play around partner enablement and training, in response to partner feedback.

“We took that aspect and integrated it into the new program,” he added. “In the past, the Dell side only certified based on the company but the big difference is that now we are certifying based on individuals.

“So if people change companies which does happen in the IT industry, the certifications follow the individual when they switch.”

Across Asia Pacific and Japan, Dell EMC’s channel business represents 70 per cent of the vendor’s revenues in the region, with Australia and New Zealand around the 40-50 per cent mark.

Excluding Greater China, Dell EMC has close to 30,000 partners across the region, with around 600 “metal tier” partners, covering Titanium, Platinum and Gold tier rankings.

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